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Recent Publications


Featured
Ecosystem Services in the Ohio River Basin
Ecosystem Services in the Ohio River Basin

In 2024, Earth Economics, supported the Ohio River Basin Alliance with a high-level valuation of the benefits created by natural ecosystems in the Ohio River Basin. The study found that the basin’s 68M acres of natural ecosystems produce at least $50B in annual benefits, and $1.17T in benefits over 30 years, discounted at at a 2-percent.

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Protecting farms and wetlands along the Lower Vermilion River
Protecting farms and wetlands along the Lower Vermilion River

Last year, Earth Economics supported Bluewing Civil Consulting, Headway Environmental, and the Vermilion Soil and Water Conservation District with an analysis of ecosystem services values under alternatives for development of water control structures and levee systems in the Lower Vermillion Watershed, Louisiana.

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The Natural Capital Wealth of Santa Barbara County, CA
The Natural Capital Wealth of Santa Barbara County, CA

The high quality-of-life in Santa Barbara County, CA grows from its great diversity of landscapes and waters. The county's open spaces generate at least $2.96B in value each year. Over a century, this amounts to an asset value of at least $138.9B, making conservation not just an environmental priority, but a smart economic investment in the county's future.

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Building Value Underground: Soil Health and Quality Valuation Tool
Building Value Underground: Soil Health and Quality Valuation Tool

This year, Earth Economics partnered with Iroquois Valley Farmland REIT to produce an in-house Soil Health and Quality Valuation Tool to track the ecosystem services benefits produced by farms in their portfolio.

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The Benefits of Green Infrastructure in Central Ohio
The Benefits of Green Infrastructure in Central Ohio

Earth Economics partnered with the Franklin Soil and Water Conservation District to estimate the value of the co-benefits supported by their green infrastructure incentives for businesses, developers, and homeowners. We found that a 1-acre of rain garden in Franklin County provides as much as $74,000 in co-benefits each year, and that every time a rain barrel is filled, it saves $1.21 in irrigation costs. 

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Carbon Credit Potential of Nez Perce Wetlands
Carbon Credit Potential of Nez Perce Wetlands

The Nez Perce Tribe is investigating natural carbon solutions to restore soil health, habitat, and sequester atmospheric greenhouse pollution. In August of 2023, Earth Economics partnered with the Tribe to analyze the Tribe’s options for participating in carbon markets as sellers of wetland-generated carbon credits.

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Green Stormwater Infrastructure in Washington, DC
Green Stormwater Infrastructure in Washington, DC

Earth Economics worked with Green Compass to value their projects in DC’s Stormwater Retention Credit trading program. When fully established, seven sites will create $1.3M in benefits to local communities every year, delivering a return of $7.80 for every dollar invested. Investment by CDFIs and Green Banks in groups who merge sustainability and community goals (such as Green Compass) will accelerate the pace of GSI throughout the District, creating strong social and environmental benefits for residents. 

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Valuing Forest and Wetland Loss on Staten Island
Valuing Forest and Wetland Loss on Staten Island

Earth Economics worked the Staten Island Coalition for Wetlands and Forests (an Anthropocene Alliance member group) to quantify the value of forest and wetland losses on Staten Island. The fact sheet, “Valuing Forest and Wetland Loss on Staten Island,” shows the scale of forest and wetland losses on Staten Island, focusing on the ecosystem services lost from the destruction of the Graniteville wetland.

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Expanding FEMA’s Benefit Cost Analysis
Expanding FEMA’s Benefit Cost Analysis

Last spring, Earth Economics developed a thought experiment for Save the Sound of the Chittenden Park Living Shoreline project, to identify key limitations of FEMA’s BCA tools and processes. This project would implement nature-based erosion control designs to protect and restore the 155-acre seaward edge of the West River Marsh, which would in turn protect other assets (including built infrastructure) further inland. Securing FEMA support to restore the marsh would require the agency to consider the environment as critical natural infrastructure.

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Restoring Coastal Forested Wetlands
Restoring Coastal Forested Wetlands

The Belle Pointe Coastal Mitigation Bank is a 387-acre Wetland Mitigation Bank in Louisiana. The bank was previously agricultural land, which flooded frequently and required levees and pumping to remain productive. Delta Land Services permanently restored the site to a forested wetland, planting native coastal bottomland hardwood and bald cypress. The new ecosystem will support resiliency in the face of storm surge, trees will clean air and sequester carbon in one of the most polluted areas in the US, and water quality from agricultural and industrial/commercial runoff will improve. Earth Economics found that the total value in ecosystem services permanently protected by the project was $101 million (USD 2021)—$1,813 per person per year for nearby residents and students. 

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Nature's Value in Rangeland Conservation
Nature's Value in Rangeland Conservation

Earth Economics partnered with Natural Resources Conservation Services to improve and expand our rangeland ecosystem service valuation framework, including the ecological effects of new conservation practices on the health of rangelands managed by the Bureau of Land Management within the Western Range and Irrigated Region of the Inner Basin West.

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